Reptiles, Mammals, and the Challenge of Becoming a Great Leader
Overview
A truly great leader is a unique animal.
"Leaders come in all shapes, sizes, and types. Some are the reptiles,
the cold-blooded, tough-as-nails decision makers with their eyes on the
numbers and a focus on control. Others are the mammals, the
warm-blooded, compassionate creatures who connect with those around them
and build success through mutual trust and open communication.
Good leaders, of course, combine the best attributes of both. And the
truly great leader is the one who transcends type and moves beyond usual
barometers of success to achieve real change in his or her organization.
It is time to challenge yourself to become a great leader. It won't be
easy or quick. After all, writes Joe White, ""You can't become a Great
Leader just by deciding that's your goal."" Still, by setting the goal,
you will commit yourself to climb what the author calls the Leadership
Pyramid and achieve milestones in your professional and personal
development.
You'll start by building the basics, or Foundation Requirements: a
desire to be in charge, and the corresponding ability, strength, and
character that all leaders--especially the great ones--must possess.
And you'll develop a balance between disciplined, analytical reptilian
leadership characteristics and those of the nurturing, engaged mammal.
As these attributes mature, you will notice your perspective has changed.
You will find inherent value in risk-taking and innovation, you will
require and reward superb talent, and you will see the wide implications
of every potential decision through development of the ""helicopter
view.""
Finally, all these skills and qualities will coalesce into something
bigger than the sum of their parts, an intangible but very real
""sparkle factor"" that separates the great leaders from the merely good.
The Nature of Leadership looks at the universal qualities of great
contemporary leaders as well as those historical figures--such as
Abraham Lincoln, George Washington, and Dr. Martin Luther King,
Jr.--whose leadership brilliance still resonates. It cites modern
organizational leaders ranging from IBM's tough Lou Gerstner to the
mammalian Herb Kelleher of Southwest
Airlines, along with South Africa's Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Teach for
America founder Wendy Kopp, GE's Jack Welch, Apple's innovative Steve
Jobs, and many ""unsung heroes"" who have achieved greatness. Joe White
also sprinkles the book with anecdotes of his own experiences, writing
with an exceptional blend of warmth and candor.
A special feature of this mind-opening book is the ""nature of your
leadership"" survey, a questionnaire to help you identify your
strengths, preferences, and self-development needs.
With its unique combination of inspiring examples, cogent analysis, and
practical advice, The Nature of Leadership takes you beyond the usual
boundaries of type to a realm of individual and organizational growth
reserved for only the greatest leaders."
About the Author
"B. Joseph White is President of the University of Illinois. He was
previously interim president of the University of Michigan and dean of
its top-ranked business school for ten years. He has been a business
executive and served as director or trustee of numerous large companies
and several healthcare organizations. He is based in Urbana, Illinois.
Yaron Prywes is an organizational consultant with GHL Global Consulting,
LLC, and a candidate for a Ph.D. in social-organizational psychology at
Columbia University. He lives in New York City."
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Table of Contents
"Foreword by C. K. Prahalad, vii
1
Become a Leader, a Better Leader, a Great Leader, 1
2
The Reptiles versus the Mammals, 17
3
The Leadership Pyramid, 35
4
Reptilian Excellence, 53
5
Mammalian Excellence, 89
6
The Secret of Becoming a Great Leader, 125
7
Challenge Yourself: Become a Great Leader, 151
Appendix: The ""Nature of Your Leadership"" Survey, 175
Notes, 185
Index, 189
Acknowledgments, 195"
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